A wealthy man working in an advertising agency and a dedicated doctor fall in love and marry. When his wife dies, the devastated man must fulfil her last wishes.
Reviews
Rishabh (Salman Khan) and Pari (Preity Zinta) have a deeply happy, loving marriage until Pari is killed in an accident. At her death, she becomes connected to a young woman (Dhani, played by Bhumika Chawla) in a real and tangible way. Unaware of the connection between them, Rishabh and Dhani meet. Dhani immediately falls in love with him, and Rishabh, though attracted, fights against it, as he'd rather live in the past with Pari. When the connection is discovered, their lives will be changed.This is a sweet, emotional drama, celebrating the depth of true love. Khan has good chemistry with both Zinta and Chawla, and all play their parts well. Helen plays Dhani's grandmother and is, as always, a delight. The music is nice, but the choreography is below average. Overall, despite a resolution I found to be too quick, this is an excellent film.
I enjoyed this movie. It was very sweet. Definitely a chick flick. I agree that Salman Khan probably did some of his best acting in this film. I would say that the movie was a lot like the American film "Return to Me" with Minnie Driver and David Doucovity(Spelling???). The only thing that I would say needed to be taken care of is the fact that Bhoomika should have had a scar because some of her clothing was low enough that a scar from the heart transplant would be visible. Otherwise decent movie and worth watching.I also feel that the second ask could have been better developed. I feel that there needed to be a greater change in Salman when he realizes he loves Bhoomika. It almost seems that he falls in love with her just because she has his wife's heart. Their relationship could have been better developed to create a more complex and better second half.
There are no glaring problems with this film, it just didn't quite cut it for me. The story is not the most creative thing imaginable, and is very predictable. This alone is true of many good movies though. Dil Ne Jise Apna Kaha stumbles by presenting the story poorly... really I think better editing could have helped this film a lot. There are some downright bizarre directorial decisions, too, like a very ill conceived gay character who appears two thirds of the way into the film for basically no reason at all. The film lingers where it could pick up the pace, and some important scenes could be expanded a bit more. I can't really fault any of the acting, although Salman Khan's portrayal of grief gets a little flat and tiresome. Some of the cinematography could have been thought through a little more, in my opinion.The film has a few emotional high points, but overall is not worth the ride.
Bhoomika Chawla and Preity Zinta provided sweet eye-candy in this movie, and there were a number of colourful dance sequences which were quite pretty, but overall I am surprised by the high rating the few voters have given it so far. It would be one of the weaker efforts I have seen this year, and I suppose my main criticism would be the quality of the acting. Apart from the two female leads, a lot of the other acting was not as good as it should have been, and especially a number of the supporting cast were quite wooden at times. Dhani's grandma was quite hammy at times, as were some of Rishab's work colleagues, and even Rishab himself was not as well played as I have seen Salman Khan before, in "Mujhse Shaadi Karogi" for example. Some of his tearful bedside scenes were just a little hard to watch, not because of the pathos but because it wasn't believable. I did enjoy moments of the film, and the dance sequence in the nightclub was very hot, but on the whole I have seen better.